The
Research Center on Women (RCW) was established in 1970 through the work
of Sr. Austin Doherty, then Chair of the Psychology Department; Barbara
Mulligan, Director of the Continuing Education Division; and Victoria
Hinshaw, Political Science Instructor. It was created "in the hope
of contributing empirical and historical data to the study of women."
The RCW began its functioning conceptually as three centers--a resource
center on women, a research center about women and an outreach
center for women.

Originally,
the RCW had a physical location on campus and a paid staff. The first
co-directors of the RCW were Sr. Austin Doherty and Barbara Mulligan.
They had a staff of four researchers: Patricia Gorence Bach, Nancy Lewis,
Betty Weirich, and Irene Winsauer. In 1973, changes were made to the RCW
administrative structure. A board of directors to oversee the functioning
of the RCW, its (now)coordinator and its staff, was created. The original
board members were: Lois Rice, Sr. Celestine Schall, Helen Lobue, and
Sr. Elizabeth Ann Glysh. The RCW Coordinator was Kathleen Casey Gigl.
Her staff consisted of a secretary, Karen Loreck; an assistant, Katie
Swonek; and a student volunteer, Claudia Porter. From 1976 until August
1978, Sandra Smith Moore was the RCW Coordinator.

The
physical RCW space and its collection of materials began being absorbed
into the Library in 1979. By 1981, the RCW board was gone. The RCW
Interest Group took form in response to the election of President Ronald Reagan and the continuing need for a focus on women's issues at Alverno College. This was and still is a voluntary group
of Alverno faculty and staff who meet approximately bimonthly and are
"committed to study, reflection, research, planning and working through institutional,
departmental and community structures to implement and infuse throughout
the curriculum and the community women's concerns and issues." Also
by 1981, the material collections of the RCW, although housed in their
own room, were officially a part of the Library collections and were overseen
by then RCW Librarian, Lola Stuller. By the Summer of 1994, the materials
and the physical space of RCW were completely absorbed by the Library:
the material collection and collecting goals were fully integrated into
that of the Library and the physical space was remodeled into the Circulation/Reserves
area.

RCW as a viable concept has continued to exist at Alverno. Its collections
have been overseen by the Library. Its legacy has lived on through the Alverno curriculum,
Career Education Center, Internship Office, Telesis Institute, Alverno Early Learning Center (Child Care), and RCW-sponsored programming on campus. Its mission has been carried
out by the Research Center on Women (RCW) Interest Group. In response to a growing need for action once again, some members of the Research Center on Women Interest Group joined with other interested individuals and organizations and embarked on a project to document the status of girls in Wisconsin. They published a report in the spring of 2007. One result of that report was that an anonymous donor provided the resources to open Alverno's Research Center for Women and Girls located in Clare Hall in Fall 2009.

RCW has come full-circle. With a new name, it is once again a viable place with an extensive research agenda. The Research Center on Women Interest Group continues its important work too, but has been renamed to avoid confusion with the Research Center for Women and Girls--the Feminist Education Advisory Group (FEAG).

For
more historical information about the Research Center on Women, contact the Alverno
College Archives. The finding
aid for the Research Center on Women Collection is also available
online.